4.6 Article

Identification of Proteins Sensitive to Thermal Stress in Human Neuroblastoma and Glioma Cell Lines

Journal

PLOS ONE
Volume 7, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0049021

Keywords

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Funding

  1. French Foundation Fellowship
  2. National Institutes of Health [R21AG025426, R01NS44278]
  3. SantaFe HealthCare Alzheimer's Disease Research Center
  4. Huntington's Disease Society of America Coalition for a Cure

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Heat-shock is an acute insult to the mammalian proteome. The sudden elevation in temperature has far-reaching effects on protein metabolism, leads to a rapid inhibition of most protein synthesis, and the induction of protein chaperones. Using heat-shock in cells of neuronal (SH-SY5Y) and glial (CCF-STTG1) lineage, in conjunction with detergent extraction and sedimentation followed by LC-MS/MS proteomic approaches, we sought to identify human proteins that lose solubility upon heat-shock. The two cell lines showed largely overlapping profiles of proteins detected by LC-MS/MS. We identified 58 proteins in detergent insoluble fractions as losing solubility in after heat shock; 10 were common between the 2 cell lines. A subset of the proteins identified by LC-MS/MS was validated by immunoblotting of similarly prepared fractions. Ultimately, we were able to definitively identify 3 proteins as putatively metastable neural proteins; FEN1, CDK1, and TDP-43. We also determined that after heat-shock these cells accumulate insoluble polyubiquitin chains largely linked via lysine 48 (K-48) residues. Collectively, this study identifies human neural proteins that lose solubility upon heat-shock. These proteins may represent components of the human proteome that are vulnerable to misfolding in settings of proteostasis stress. Citation: Xu G, Stevens SM Jr, Kobiessy F, Brown H, McClung S, et al. (2012) Identification of Proteins Sensitive to Thermal Stress in Human Neuroblastoma and Glioma Cell Lines. PLoS ONE 7(11): e49021. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0049021

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